The evening world. Newspaper, July 11, 1913, Page 14

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a 14 ER CLARK GIVES LIE DIRECT TO DAVE LAMAR ——— Appears Before Senate Lobby Hunters To-Day and Also! Criticises Ledyard. _INB_SVENING WORLD, FRIDAY a Copyright, 193, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). Flirtation, a Boat Rocking Prank of Cupid; Safe it There’s No Upset in Deep Water $5,000 GIFT TO NORTH. | Former Director of the Census Got It for Work on the | Dingley Bill. WASHINGTON, July 11.—@peaker | *Rkemp Clark interrupted the senate Yebby inquiry to-day :o place on the| weoord an emphatic denial of every @tatement made by David Samar and Wéwerd Lauterbach tn their stories told | te Lewis Case Ledyard connecting him rath Morgan & Co. + “Enever met either J. P, Morgan or ‘Say member of his Arm in my life,” aid Clark, ‘and only suw Mr. Morgan | mee in my life, and that was across a! @enquet hall. "3 mever knew there was such @ man "en Lewis Case Ledyard in my life. 1 fae Introduced to Edward Lauterbach — years ago and only met him hat once and then for a very brief gartod. Every statement connecting my | , MMe With anyone in the Lemar-Lawmer- Rach testimony ts an absolute ile. “I delieve that when Mr. Ledyard earned that my name and that of Ben- tor Gtone wore being handied about in ‘tis manner. he should have communi- cated with ws.” ‘The etatemerm was spread on the wecord. FELL OF FUNDE RAISED BY THE WOOL MEN. | Armons He SPECIALLY Siaetsuse FURS Dull Gray Sky of the Unattractive—Any Girl Beautiful and Any Man an Apollo Where Either Is Scarce. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. “Everybody firts,” writes a woman reader of The Evening World. “Really what does it matter whether flirtation is right or wrong since ‘everybody's doin’ it Whether a female person is eight or eighty she will ™ prick up her ears whenever a man appears upon the horizon. As for men, well, you yourself must know that even @ male corpse takes notice when a skirt trails over his grave.” If this young woman is to be be- Ueved, then there can be no question as to the ethics of filrtation, Good republicans as we all are, we will have to admit the majority is al- ways right. So if the majority flirts > z il g i i f i F i i q ; i i z i z oF Ze Be 38s. gut ttt HE : F 3 : at Fy Rg ; > é & | athed Gerke 55 * Li é ify ef nS ‘BEAD WOMAN'S HUSBAND [AS FOUND IN HOSPITAL AMPH by Train Half Hour Before ‘gz. Wife Is Killed by An- aR* other Train, . ,. PATWRSON, N. J, July W—Mre. temarte ‘Martin, an eMerly woman, who ‘tive at Fatriawn, walked undergthe Gates at the Erie Railroad's River atreet @fessing Wednesday morning directly fm front of a coming train. Her body ‘was taken to the morgue. Searching for relatives, the authorities last night Jecated her only one, her husband, oo Marten, in the Genera! Hospital. ea reached that institution about half > an hour before his wife was killed, hav- Ing been hit by @ train on the Busque- hanna division of the Erie and brought » here, He may recover, but as he is eighty years old the chances are slight. He does not know his wife isn dead, “DON'T SHOOT, WE GIVE UP.” *Potlceman's He Causes the furreuder of To Su Policeman Kelty of the Hundred and Fourth at two men who we & paint store at No. 246 Second avenue early this morning. “Don't shoot. We'll wive up,” felled the men and then they surrendered. Paint store is owned by » man Krans. In the Hurtem Court to-day } each of the men ait the action of the Gri said they were Charle ver Abraham Epstein of dD Hundred and Fifth street. Ac- to Kelly he found in their mome German coins gwhich Elo ly at gate rf! | maids surround him, sirens call Here, Pallas and Aphrodite seek ByEtes ge & i aside. ‘ SE GATHERERS NEVE RAY ABOUT THORNS. apotheosis @ homely girl must find her- eelf the only unmarried woman in o Le} H a little withered, drop sf Fi 2: Mghtning in the dull gray sky of the unattractive. VIEWS OF EVENING WORLD READERS ON FLIRTING. ‘The letters of Evening World readers follow: Dear Madam: Everybody filrts. Really what does it matter whether Qirtation te right or wrong since “everybody's doin’ itt” Whether a female person is elght or eighty, a! will prick up her ears whenever o man appears upon the horizon As for men, well, you yourself must known that even a male corpse takes notice when @ skirt ia over his grave, I don't know when I began to flirt, I don’t know when I am going to quit. I shall probably primp for the undertaker, Flirtation is the face; marriage, if you look at It that ‘Way, merely the finish, What good sport cares how he finishes, so long News Oddities DRAFT RIOTS in New York began fifty years ago to-night, WOMEN'S BASEBALL CLUB, @ professional “champion” by two elopements, ’ is dusty death. Rosebuds, of enough if one looks’ Rear perfect biossoms, few of us know @ cabbage & silvery La France apart. 3 4 ‘What meek little man, accustomed uring the winter time to aitting at din- ner parties between the old maid aunt and the pastor's wife, ie not daszied and translated to the seventh heaven when he finds hima only man at @ eum team, wrecked U, 6, DISTRICT-ATTORNEY of Pittsburgh topped off a luncheon of cherries with a glass of bu{termilk and had to be taken home for the day. WILLIAMSBURG man hid §700 in the kitchen range and then came thy cold | _—_ FOOD-RAKERS declare that beri-beri is caused by eating too much rice TRISH POTATO RING sold at suction tm London for 81,23, which would buy many) potatoes in Ireland. “LONDON” BEEF is discovered to be 34 per cent. American. EVERY TIM!O IT THUNDERS asrtwelve: old girl in Marinette, Wis, loses her voice. Physicians ure studying the ¢ je. “/ DIDN'T HAPPEN IN BROOKLYN—Woman fan at a ball game was struck bya foul which split nose, knocked out three teeth and disfigured her for | Mfe, It was at a eritical at if the game, however, and she refused to be taken home, Oh, yes; this was in Zanesville, Ohio, WIFE'S ALIMONY cannot be garnisheed, Appellate Court decides. DIRECTOR TOWNSEND of the Aquarium eaye there is always a chance of ‘ mosn-eating sharks in New Yori bay late tn the cummen, May Be the Single Flash of Heat Lightning in the SURTATION ws au ea he makes the best race there is tm him? I don’t, anyhow. ANTI-PRUNE. Dear Madam: In cataloguing the Mirts you have overlooked one well ftnown and exasperating variety, the Kodak flirt. I mean the man or Woman who gets afféctionate in a Sroup photograph merely because Deople have to huddle togther eo the snapshot artist can get them all on the tim. You will fing it worth while to investigate this’ nuisance. He or she infests all summer resorts. Last year my vacation was entirely epolled by @ fresh young school ho insisted on throwing her my husband's shoulder re all having our pictures taken together. He thought it was &@ good joke, But even now I can't ooo it that way. MRS. J. B. 8. CRUELTY TO A HORSE TO SPITE ITS OWNER Police Lieutenant Noble of the Tremont station, patrolling East One Hundred and Seventy-second street early to-day, heard a strange souffling sound un the trap door of basement s' leading to the coal and wood and ice shop of Nicolo De Maro under No, 40. He stumbled down the stairs in the dark and elxteen feet down ran into the hindquarters of Ben, De Maro's big bay horse, wedged at the bottom of the mtaire with his head against the padlock but neither of them could suggest any way of getting the horse up the stairs. De Maro, who lives in the tenement above, sald that even if he were able to reach the padlock there was ao room inside the basement to turn the animal around, A block and tackle was rigged from fe iron frames of fire escapes, and Population, got raised him to t! De Maro told thought some of his rivals, spiteful be- cause he has kept the size of ten-cent pieces up to the same weight which he sold in the cooler months, had taken the horse from its stable across the street and jammed it down the stairway. LOTS OF BEAUTIFY Hai * air Soe tion of Danderine, you cannot at first—yes, but really new hi growing all over the acai; double the beauty of Gilesare Saw ‘duit, fa scraggy, e cloth Denderine and care dra your taking ay mall NO OANDRUFF—25 CENT out?—If dry, brittle, thin, or your scalp itches is full of dandruff—Use “Danderine.” Within ten minutes after an epptice ingle trace of Dandruff or a loose or falling hair, and your scalp will not itch. But what will please you most will be after a few weeks’ use, when you will actually see new hair, fine and downy ‘A little Danderine. will irapuediately brittle oad / PRO: 2 gate JULY M1 llth Article Of a Series FROM AUTO SMASH THAT LED TAREE Grade Crossing Accident’ Re- sults in Several Fatalities | and Serious Injuries, \CAR NOW,A SCRAP HEAP. ' Coroner's Questlons Bring Out Evidence of Merry Time of “Joy Riders.” | One more @eath will be added during ‘the day, the doctors at the Nesseu | Hospital at Mineola say, to the list of | three kilfe@ and five sertousiy injured, which represents the results of another | Long Island grade crossing auto ac- eldent. This happened on the Jericho turnpike about three-quarters of @ mile outside of Mineola soon after mid- | night to-dey, Thomas Boland, a plumbor, jLewie avenue, Brooklyn, is the one whose life is despaired of. He has been unconscious in the Nassau Hospital since he was picked up after the accident, suffering from #0 severe a fracture of the skull that the phyai- clans can do nothing to eave his life The names of the dead and injured are as follows: THE DEAD. of ‘George Lush, a building contractor, of No. @ Virginia avenue, Jersey City. Joseph Market, a building contractor, | of No. & Ralph avenue, Brooklyn. | THE INJURED. Thomas Boland of Lewis avenue, Brooklyn; severe fracture of the skull; will die. James Rogan of Glen Cove, L. 1.; cuts about the head and body. William Miller, owner of the car and the chauffeur at the time of the acol- dent, of Glen Cove; disjocated shoulder. Howard Benson of No. 341, Twenty- second street, Brooklyn; fractured ekull. James McDougal of Glen Cove; cev- eral teeth knocked out. is ‘The complete identification of Marttet, ene of the dead men, and of Howard Benson, unconscious because of @ frac- tured skull, was not made until man; hours after the accident because of thi peculiar reticence of the injured who were able ¢o speak ‘but re! do so until Coroner Frank Mineola had subjected them to a examination. This unusual behavior on the part of che auto riders coupled with the statements of Fred Valentine, en- gineer of the Oyster Bay train, which collided with the ovériaden aute at the Mineola crossing, led the Coroner to the belief that a major share of re- sponsibility for the fatal accident lay with the autoists themselves. ‘The eight men in the automobile, a gray touring car owned by Miller, were, with the exception of Miller himself and Benson, employed as plumbers and pipe coverera by the E. T. Willis Com- pany of New York and were working upon @ mansion under course of con- struction for Herbert I. Pratt at Glen Cove. Benson was Graughteman snd timekeeper at a house being built for George 8. Baker jr. of New York at Locust Valley. <All were living in Glen Cove. It appears from the grudging edmis- wions made by Miller and McDougal, the two least injured of the five sur vivors, that the eight men had been having a merry time of it in the machine designed only to carry five at a pinch. Midnight found them at Westbury and left that place, bound for Glen METRES WH TOIK PIN WHEN JUTE BY RCH NAR IS DEAD Reconciled Once by Pretend- ing to Swallow Mercury— Really Did It Second Time. ‘Mary Harnett, twenty-one years olf, who described herself as an actress, died to-day in the Knickerbocker Hos- pital from dichloride of mercury polson- ing taken July 4 at No, 2 West One Hundred and Ninth street, where she lived with Mrs, Margaret Gamm. At the time she said she had been Mitea by the son of a rich New Jersey eile manufacturer, who refused to ry her after a long courtship. ‘Mrs. Gamm said that five weeks the girl rented a room fgom her the young man was @ frequent calle! ‘They seemed to be very much in lov: but three weeks ago they had a quarr ‘The girl pretended to take poison in a glass of water and they became recon- clled. On July 4, after the young man hed gone, the girl told Mrs. Gamm they had quarrelied again, and that this time she really took polson—three tablets of ‘bichloride—and that she was gorry for it. Mrs, Gamm hurried her to the Women's Hospital, at Amsterdam ave- nue and One Hundred and Ninth street, and ‘rom there she was taken to the ieee ln ad loading. About 0 feet past lornere the Jericho turnpike MeCombs Fast Recovering. PARI, July 11 —Go satistactory le the| Siov"ee.neh, “There ate ao gates a; thie both elées of the crossing. The last Oyster Bay train, bound for the Pennsylvania station in Manhattan, was bowling along at a 60-mile speed just as the auto started to cross the track. Bngineer Vatentine did not see the machine until just as the crash came, and the auto waa side-wined by the pilot and side driving-wheel and tossed, & mound of scrap, twenty feet to the aide af the track. The crash roused people in the inn at Krug’s Corners and a telephone call was immediately sent to the Nassau Hospital at Mineola. At the hospital the whole countryside was combed by phone for surgeons and Dre. Cleghorn, Neisly, Bogart, Warner and Grimmer came in thelr machines from three | neighboring towne, ‘The first rescuers found MoDougal | and Miller the only men conscious; they | WASHINGTON, July 1.—The Beavis 4 Liga Lads bad of how the accl-| may now proceed to dispoge of the or at oceu: \. e other injured ones rT a Pres were put into the two hospital ambu. | ia! business for which President Wilt lances that responded to the call, while | Alle! the extra session of Congréar Miller and McDougsl went to the eame/| revision of the tariff. To-day, three Inatitution in volunteer automobiles that | months and four days after the special seer as ‘iss Auueusae kad aera the |*eesion bosan, Chairman simmons of news. When Coroner Seaman tried | th® Finance Committee was authortzel to interview them there they at| ‘ report the Underwood-Simmons Tar. first refused even to ‘ell their names) !ff bill. The measure was passed or the names of those with them, and the first identificat: of the dead and those wneonscious had to be made from papers and memoranda in their | pockets. Under direction of the Coroner the en- Gineeypot the train backed up first on TARIF BILL BEFORE SENATE FCR ACTION; Metal, Wool and Agricultual” Schedeles Cut Below Rates ’f Fixed by the House. Republicans voting against it As \t goes to the Senate the bill the principal provisions of the House measure and those particularly edve- cated by President Wilson, free raw wool and a provision that sugar ghall be fremMay 1, 1916. The Finance Com- mittee majority and the caucus have operated without a break, i Greatly extended the free Met and re- tisfaction that due warning | duced many ratos, notably in the metal, + | wool and agricultural schedules. Sweep- ing changes, how ve been made in the administrative features and the’ income tax. Cattle and wheat now are on the free lst, the latter with a countervailing duty. ONE SMALL SQUIRREL 5 GETS CITY IN TURMOIL Two Men Are Nearly Electrocuted and Reserves Called Out at Atlantic City. Spectal to The Evening, World.) ATLANTIC CITY, July 11.—A amathy Bray squirrel that escaped from an animal store at Atlantic and Indiana avenues last night caused general @us- pension of business along Attantte a) nue to-day, almost caused the electro- evtion of two men and nece: ted the calling out of police reserve: It was the exhibition of slack wire walking given by the little animal that caused all the excitement. As soon as it found itself loose the squirrel climbed & telegraph pole. The animal continue: to walk right up through the business section of the town traversing eigh: blocks and then turned up to the board walk. Two men climbed poles on eithe side of it and sought to disiodge ‘t Both. seize? live wires in supportin, themselves and were severely shocked. police were kept: busy preventins and boys wrom clim ng. Miller, when he subsequently consent- ed to talk, declared that hie auto had proceeded at reduced speed across the track, that he did not hear the alarm Dells nor the engine's whistle. The Coroner ordered the removal of the dodies of those killed to the morgue attached to the Nassau Hospital. He wald to-day he will defer the inquest until the injured now in the hospital shall be able to testify DOG CARRIES A BONE , TOA DEAD PLAYMATE; . SNAPS AT POLICEMAN Strays Had Romped Together} Around Momingside Park Un- til Wagon Ran Over One. Every one in the neighborhood of Morn- fagside Park had comé to know a little Diack mongrel and a shaggy yellow dog which for weeks had played together fn the park and in the adjoining streets. Beldom was one dog seen without the other and both were the friends and playmates of the small boys of the neighborhood, ‘The boys didn't know where the dogs had 6dme from or how they ‘scraped ‘together a living. Last night an expr wagon ran over Mtele black dos. animal sprang eer what was-like a scream of pain, si to the sidewalk and dropped dead under a tree. The yellow dog was = few feet away. He ran over to the aide of his friend, pawed fat the little black dog and licked him tongue. wirhea’ he lay down beside the little black dog as though on guard. A po- | Hceman came slong and saw that the black dog was dead. The yellow dog | wouldn't let him get very near and when the policeman tried to drive the yellow dog away the animal snapped at him. ‘All night the dog kept watch and when the youngsters of the neighbo hood appeared after breakfast to-day the yellow Gog greeted them with a wag of the tail, but they didn’t suc- ceed in getting him to leave the side of his dead friend until nearly 9 o'clock, when he scampered away. hadn't desert the little black dog. ntly he came trotting back with @ bone, which he laid in front of the little dog and eat back to watch, He seemed surprised when the little black dog didn't offer to touch the bone and he pawed at him and barked short, sharp invitations to eat ‘The Health Department wagon was went for the body of the little black dog and @ policeman went with it for every Going Away? Don't forget to take a éWs| COLLARS SHIRTS Drogress made by William F. McCombs, | cogging and no night watchman, for Chairman of the Democratic National | raw traine pase on this branch at night, Committes, toward convalescence since | But there are electric alarm dells on hig recent operation for appendicitis that the surgeons in attendance believe he will be able to leave the hospital) at @ comparatively early date, —>-——. ‘War Excitement Brings Death. 8ST. PETERSBURG, July 11.—N. Ta- burno, @ prominent publicist here, died to-day of heart disease after writing an | article on the Balkan war, He was of | Montenegrin caused by ¢ campaign is said to have brought about | hia death. ° GLOSSY HAIR, . Tue | | | it., styles on display in our time. The effect se amasing—your hair will be light, fatty end wavy, and have an a ance of abu: 3 an) incomparable lustre, softness and luxu- | Renes te beauty and shimmer of true | wet icant bottle of Knowiton's nderine from euy drug »' or let counter, and proveto reaeett tesla: 55 Duane Street 424 Broadwe: pring 9890 126 Dotencey onned 1960 AU Branch Offices ( one in the neighborhood knew the yetlog would not let any one take ouey Ee ittle black friend {f he could help TRoY's BEST PRODUCT EARL & WILSON For You, Mr Storekeeper You must keep your place cool, clean and \ inviting these warm days. Your business requires Your.success demands it The Electric Fan will solve your problem. It means better work from your employees and comfort and general satisfac: tion for your customers. ‘Branch Offige Show Rooms The New York Edison Company Look over the many At Your Service « Phone Worth 3000 cam | 27 lass ie Bryant $262 | sf) E lath St Broadway) Opes uatil Midnight Cell Bryent 5151 Branch Offices for the Convenience of the Public: Phone Harlem 4020 Melrose 3340 Addeose 124 W 424 8 Night ead FEE UST EXTENDED. in committee by a strict party vote, |”

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